‘Loyalty’: Comey’s new book title a dig at Trump

(FILES) This file photo taken on June 8, 2017 shows former FBI Director James Comey listening during a hearing before the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC. Former FBI director James Comey, who was abruptly fired by US President Donald Trump in May, revealed himself on October 23, 2017 to be the owner of a mysterious Twitter account. Speculation had been rife for months that Comey was behind the account named after 20th century American theologian Reinhold Niebuhr.Comey confirmed it on Monday by tweeting a picture of himself standing on a road staring into the distance.The picture was accompanied by a tweet which said: “Goodbye Iowa. On the road home. Gotta get back to writing. Will try to tweet in useful ways.” / AFP PHOTO / Brendan Smialowski

Former FBI director James Comey takes a snarky dig at President Donald Trump with the title of his forthcoming book: “A Higher Loyalty: Truth, Lies, and Leadership.”

It was Trump who demanded allegiance from Comey early this year, before firing him in frustration over the FBI’s mounting probe into whether his campaign colluded with Russian meddling in the 2016 election.

“I need loyalty, I expect loyalty,” Trump told the country’s top investigator at a private White House dinner in January, one week after Trump became president, according to Comey.

In a memorandum he wrote after the dinner, Comey said he was uncomfortable with Trump’s repeated entreaties, and had only promised “honest loyalty” afterward.

When Comey kept the investigation going against more implicit pressure from Trump in the following months, the president fired him on May 9.

But that backfired: it sparked the appointment of a special prosecutor for the investigation, Robert Mueller, a former FBI director, whose mandate then expanded to include possible obstruction of justice by the president himself.

Days after the firing, furious that Comey had kept and leaked memos of their discussions, Trump blasted via Twitter:

“James Comey better hope that there are no ‘tapes’ of our conversations before he starts leaking to the press!”

To which Comey replied, in Congressional testimony weeks later, “Lordy, I hope there are tapes.”

Announcing his book contract in August with publisher Flatiron Books — a deal reportedly worth several million dollars — Comey titillated future readers by promising “yet unheard anecdotes.”

The publisher added nothing to that promise on Thursday, although it sounded like Trump could feature prominently. Flatiron said the book, to be released in May 2018, will “explore what good, ethical leadership looks like and how it drives sound decisions.”

On his own rarely used Twitter account — @formerBu — Comey simply tweeted: “Lordy I hope there are pictures.”